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<channel>
	<title>Ultimate Apple</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.ultimate-apple.com/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com</link>
	<description>Your One Stop Apple Resource</description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 17:08:09 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>21 deals a winning hand</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/21-deals-a-winning-hand/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/21-deals-a-winning-hand/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 13:08:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[Available for rental ($3.99) or purchase ($14.99), “21” tells the story of card-counting MIT students who turned the tables on Las Vegas casinos. Directed by Robert Luketic, the movie stars Jim Sturgess, Kevin Spacey, Kate Bosworth, and Laurence Fishburne. Got an Apple TV? You can enjoy 21 in HD. 
More:  continued here 
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Available for rental ($3.99) or purchase ($14.99), “21” tells the story of card-counting MIT students who turned the tables on Las Vegas casinos. Directed by Robert Luketic, the movie stars Jim Sturgess, Kevin Spacey, Kate Bosworth, and Laurence Fishburne. Got an Apple TV? You can enjoy 21 in HD. </p>
<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewMovie?id=284749108&#038;s=143441?sr=hotnews'> continued here </a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Wanted: An iPhone power miser app</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/wanted-an-iphone-power-miser-app/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/wanted-an-iphone-power-miser-app/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 13:08:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Software, Developer, iPhone
While Guy Kawasaki might be able to get 36 hours of standby life out of his iPhone 3G, many of the rest of us are struggling with having enough power to make it through a day. 
Mike Davidson, CEO of Newsvine in Seattle, came up with a great [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Filed under: <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/analysisopinion/" rel="tag">Analysis / Opinion</a>, <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/software/" rel="tag">Software</a>, <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/developer/" rel="tag">Developer</a>, <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/iphone/" rel="tag">iPhone</a></p>
<p><img vspace="8" hspace="8" border="0" align="right" src="http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.tuaw.com/media/2008/08/iphonepowermiser.png" alt="" />While <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/guy-kawasaki-shares-his-secrets-of-long-iphone-life/" target="_blank">Guy Kawasaki</a> might be able to get 36 hours of standby life out of his <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/tag/iPhone/">iPhone</a> 3G, many of the rest of us are struggling with having enough power to make it through a day. </p>
<p><a target="_blank" href="http://www.mikeindustries.com/blog/archive/2008/08/lazyweb-request-iphone-power-miser">Mike Davidson</a>, CEO of <a target="_blank" href="http://www.newsvine.com/">Newsvine</a> in Seattle, came up with a great idea for any iPhone developers in the TUAW audience. He&#8217;d like to see an iPhone power miser application that could turn off 3G, location services, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and push e-mail with one tap (low drain mode), then turn on all of the same services with another tap (full power mode). </p>
<p>Davidson explains that it currently takes him 15 steps to disable the power-hungry features of his 3G, and another 15 steps to turn those features back on. Whether or not those features are something that the average NDA&#8217;d iPhone developer can actually control is one big question; if they aren&#8217;t, this would be a great app for Apple to develop &#8212; quickly!</p>
<p>Me? I&#8217;m waiting for &#8220;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Clapper" target="_blank">The Clapper</a>&#8221; version of the power miser app &#8212; &#8220;Clap On! Clap Off!&#8221;<br />
<h6 style="clear: both; padding: 8px 0 0 0; height: 2px; font-size: 1px; border: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;"></h6>
<p><a href=http://www.mikeindustries.com/blog/archive/2008/08/lazyweb-request-iphone-power-miser>Read</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/wanted-an-iphone-power-miser-app/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent link to this entry">Permalink</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/forward/1297466/" title="Send this entry to a friend via email">Email this</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/wanted-an-iphone-power-miser-app/#comments" title="View reader comments on this entry">Comments</a></p>
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<p><a href="http://feeds.tuaw.com/~a/weblogsinc/tuaw?a=p8lymz"><img src="http://feeds.tuaw.com/~a/weblogsinc/tuaw?i=p8lymz" border="0"></img></a></p>
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<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://feeds.tuaw.com/~r/weblogsinc/tuaw/~3/377469034/'> continued here </a></p>
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		<title>CotEditor - 0.9.5</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/coteditor-095/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/coteditor-095/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 17:08:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[

Download &#124;
Comments &#124; Screenshot &#124; Homepage &#124;
Changelog

Code Editor (C, C++, CSS, eRuby, HTML, Java, Javascript, LaTeX, Perl, PHP, Ruby, Shell script) &#8230;

	99usethis
  Version: 0.9.5
  License: Freeware

Changes
The changes from 0.9.5 to 0.9.4
&#60;New features&#62;
The current row highlighted the ability to add (Shashi&#39;s request)
The status bar DOROWA documents and information by placing the cursor to the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img align="right" src="http://osx.iusethis.com/icon/osx/coteditor.png"/></p>
<p>
<a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/download/2266">Download</a> |<br />
<a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/coteditor">Comments</a> | <a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/coteditor?screenshot=1">Screenshot</a> | <a href="http://www.aynimac.com/p_blog/files/article.php?id=41">Homepage</a> |<br />
<a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/versions/2266">Changelog</a>
</p>
<p>Code Editor (C, C++, CSS, eRuby, HTML, Java, Javascript, LaTeX, Perl, PHP, Ruby, Shell script)<a href="/app/coteditor"> &hellip;</a></p>
<p>
	<b><a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/users/2266">99</a></b>usethis<br />
  Version: <b><a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/versions/2266">0.9.5</a></b><br />
  License: <b>Freeware</b>
</p>
<h3>Changes</h3>
<p>The changes from 0.9.5 to 0.9.4</p>
<p>&lt;New features&gt;</p>
<p>The current row highlighted the ability to add (Shashi&#39;s request)<br />
The status bar <span class="caps">DOROWA </span>documents and information by placing the cursor to the ability to display characters (hiroto sakai&#39;s site of Sakai&#39;s request)<br />
Script menu to display the context menu to add inline (MMJ Blog of <span class="caps">MMJ</span>&#39;s request)<br />
&lt;Add / modify / change&gt;</p>
<p>More than 10.4 when running on the color process to review the details of the definition of a regular expression search RegexKitLite adopted, 0.9.3, as compared to the speed of color from 1.5 to 4 times as much improved (Note: Regular expression syntax is a little difference because the color change the definition if it is please be careful. Factory set in the construction process is without problems. For more information, see the attached document &#8220;ReadMe-J.rtf &#8220;Please)<br />
Call to write the document is opened when the alert to appear immediately changed (edited in the past when it was shown)<br />
<span class="caps">PURINTODAIAROGUSHITO </span>resized to a smaller (tomato has to thank)<br />
More than 10.4 running when the invisible character display system provided most of the methods used to change<br />
Character input when reviewing the contents of the execution, improved responsiveness<br />
Double-click to select a string, &#8220;:&#8221; word also be treated as a separator<br />
Character input outline steps to update the menu and change the display to the <span class="caps">CHIRATSUKANAI</span><br />
Preferences notation &#8220;printed&#8221; to &#8220;print&#8221; to change<br />
Preferences &#8220;to replicate the line marked&#8221; &#8220;composite font and a higher fixed-line&#8221; to change the default settings on<br />
Preferences &#8220;in the background every time the file is edited in the Dock icon to jump&#8221; to remove items (set itself continue to use internally and by the default is on.)<br />
<span class="caps">DOROWA </span>document information and the number of lines of characters right adjustment in the selection of characters to make the brackets, <span class="caps">KUKURANAI</span><br />
&#8220;A search string to synchronize with other applications&#8221; to enable the while, CotEditor to activate each time the selected search string is released with a revised version that was actually captured only when they choose a whole Of<br />
Preferences tab style editing sheet syntax OK button when any error of smarty<br />
Preferences tabs to help set up a shortcut buttons<br />
Preferences panel is already open and &#8220;Preferences&#8221; menu is selected in the case, centering on not only activated<br />
More than 10.4 running when the Preferences panel does not appear on the toolbar<br />
Edit Preferences panel style sheet, legible name of the default style<br />
Other code optimization<br />
&lt;Bugfixes&gt;</p>
<p>Drag and drop or copy produced by the string of end-of-line code in the set of documents, regardless of the LF always has been fixed<br />
When you paste text at the end of incomplete color may be fixed<br />
Replacement color will be updated after the execution had been fixed<br />
After running the replacement line numbers, and outline the contents of the menu, non-compatible character of each list was not updated have been fixed<br />
About a partial amendment to the screen in English (thanks to her door woven profit Suga)<br />
Invisible characters appear when the update infinite loop line number may be fixed<br />
Call to Save the document to write a new document also writable icon that was fixed<br />
Clean Sweep search results window display panels remain closed when the applications were back in transition to close the search panel could not be fixed (thanks to Mr. Shashi)<br />
While editing a highlight, highlighting disappears fixed (have not heard a word of gratitude to Mr. kuwa)<br />
Color in the string after <span class="caps">ANHAIRAITO </span>to highlight the color disappears fixed<br />
When you run a 10.5 in the syntax of Preferences tab style editing sheet, &#8220;the factory default&#8221; button is activated illegally may be fixed<br />
When you run a 10.5 in the syntax of Preferences tab style editing sheet, pressing a button to add items to the table empty item is automatically added to edit the state had to cope with problems<br />
Syntax definition color preferences change when the change in the syntax of the document was open to the document if it is re-activated when the color will be different syntax documents also re - Color that had been fixed<br />
Dock menu back to a time when the &#8220;new&#8221; and &#8220;open&#8221; if you run, was not active in the fixed<br />
The clarity of the text window to apply only when there was the persistence of vision remains fixed<br />
When splitting the text, the clarity of the text window only to apply the changes to the text only one change was not transparent fixed<br />
&#8220;PHP&#8221; default color definition was to remove duplicate items</p>
<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://osx.iusethis.com/app/coteditor'> continued here </a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Tip o’ the Week: iPhone Cinema</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/tip-o%e2%80%99-the-week-iphone-cinema/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/tip-o%e2%80%99-the-week-iphone-cinema/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 15:08:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[You are traveling and have a long flight ahead of you. You aren&#8217;t feeling very social and the last thing you want is to get into a conversation with the person next to you who just happens to have a great multi-level marketing opportunity for you. 
It&#8217;s late at night and you can&#8217;t sleep. Your significant [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You are traveling and have a long flight ahead of you. You aren&#8217;t feeling very social and the last thing you want is to get into a conversation with the person next to you who just happens to have a great multi-level marketing opportunity for you. </p>
<p>It&#8217;s late at night and you can&#8217;t sleep. Your significant [...]</p>
<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://www.theiphoneblog.com/2008/08/28/tip-o-the-week-iphone-cinema/'> continued here </a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>Why is everyone picking on Apple?</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/why-is-everyone-picking-on-apple/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/why-is-everyone-picking-on-apple/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 14:08:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Apple
A spate of bad news surrounding Mobile Me and iPhone 3Gqualityproblems paired with renewed vigor from competitors Microsoft, Dell, and Nokia has Apple running out of slack from the normally fawning press (TUAW certainly not withstanding). 
Forbes has a story about why Apple seems to have lost its luster recently. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Filed under: <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/analysisopinion/" rel="tag">Analysis / Opinion</a>, <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/apple/" rel="tag">Apple</a></p>
<p><img vspace="5" hspace="5" border="0" align="right" alt="" src="http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.tuaw.com/media/2008/08/5thave-9234802398420.jpg" />A spate of bad news surrounding <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/mobileme/">Mobile Me</a> and <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/22/woman-sues-apple-claims-false-iphone-advertising/">iPhone 3G</a><a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/27/iphone-2-0-2-security-flaw-makes-private-data-accessible/">quality</a><a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/27/british-ad-watchdogs-nix-iphone-whole-internet-claim/">problems</a> paired with renewed vigor from competitors <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/21/whats-the-deal-with-seinfeld-doing-ads-for-microsoft/">Microsoft</a>, Dell, and Nokia has Apple running out of slack from the normally fawning press (TUAW <em>certainly</em> not withstanding). </p>
<p><em>Forbes</em> has a story about <a href="http://www.forbes.com/technology/2008/08/27/apple-iphone-complaints-tech-enter-cx_bc_0828apple.html">why Apple seems to have lost its luster recently</a>. <em>The New York Times</em> is waxing nostalgic with a <a href="http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/08/27/apple-imperfect/index.html?partner=rssnyt">retrospective article titled <em>Apple Imperfect</em></a>. <em>The National Post</em> cites TechCrunch&#8217;s Michael Arrington saying <a href="http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=752010">Apple is &#8220;rotting&#8221;</a> and &#8220;flailing badly at the edges.&#8221;</p>
<p>Consider the parable of the friend. Say you have a good friend, who&#8217;s trustworthy, reliable and generally happy to be around you. If that friend suddenly isn&#8217;t glad to see you anymore, swears at the elderly and starts drinking cheap bourbon from a hip flask in meetings, you&#8217;d say something, right? At least you&#8217;d worry that your friend was on the wrong path. </p>
<p>That&#8217;s where we find Apple today: A friend on the wrong path. Many have noted that a lack of transparency in <a href="http://db.tidbits.com/article/9741">admitting its mistakes</a> is hurting its credibility. The fact that it&#8217;s making mistakes in the first place is generally forgivable, but we&#8217;ve been spoiled by Apple&#8217;s pristine track record of consistently delivering quality. As consumers, we want the quality back. If anything, our expectations are even higher now to properly correct the various perceived injustices we&#8217;ve suffered.</p>
<p>Taking the long view, Apple <em>will</em> pull out of its funk. Knowing Steve Jobs, it will do so in a spectacular fashion, too, with new products, product improvements, or both. Apple isn&#8217;t suffering from a lack of talent or innovation. It&#8217;s suffering from management problems that any company of its size faces on a daily basis: scheduling new products, preventing employee burnout, and managing logistics. </p>
<p>We&#8217;re nowhere near <a href="http://finance.google.com/finance?chdnp=1&amp;chdd=1&amp;chds=1&amp;chdv=1&amp;chvs=maximized&amp;chdeh=0&amp;chdet=1219953600000&amp;chddm=1201152&amp;q=NASDAQ:AAPL&amp;ntsp=0">Apple&#8217;s nadir under Gil Amelio</a>, over a decade ago. In fact, investors don&#8217;t seem to be fazed at all, with stock prices rebounding to their levels in May. Apple may already be back.</p>
<h6 style="clear: both; padding: 8px 0 0 0; height: 2px; font-size: 1px; border: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;"></h6>
<p><a href=http://www.forbes.com/technology/2008/08/27/apple-iphone-complaints-tech-enter-cx_bc_0828apple.html>Read</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/why-is-everyone-picking-on-apple/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent link to this entry">Permalink</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/forward/1297831/" title="Send this entry to a friend via email">Email this</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/why-is-everyone-picking-on-apple/#comments" title="View reader comments on this entry">Comments</a></p>
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<div class="feedflare"><a href="http://feeds.tuaw.com/~f/weblogsinc/tuaw?a=1hv1kk"><img src="http://feeds.tuaw.com/~f/weblogsinc/tuaw?i=1hv1kk" border="0"></img></a><a href="http://feeds.tuaw.com/~f/weblogsinc/tuaw?a=tTDMYk"><img src="http://feeds.tuaw.com/~f/weblogsinc/tuaw?i=tTDMYk" border="0"></img></a></div>
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<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://feeds.tuaw.com/~r/weblogsinc/tuaw/~3/377376915/'> continued here </a></p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>One-day deal on WD 250GB portable drive</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/one-day-deal-on-wd-250gb-portable-drive/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/one-day-deal-on-wd-250gb-portable-drive/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 15:08:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[Filed under: Deals
Got some data cleanup plans for the Labor Day weekend? I know I do &#8212; there are scads of vacation pictures, silly videos and MP3s that have got to get gone from my laptop hard drive and onto some standby storage. That&#8217;s why I was excited to see Amazon&#8217;s one-day deal (8/28 only, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Filed under: <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/deals/" rel="tag">Deals</a></p>
<p><img width="225" vspace="8" hspace="8" height="225" border="0" align="right" alt="" src="http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.tuaw.com/media/2008/08/31ionxrwuul._sl500_aa280_.jpg" />Got some data cleanup plans for the Labor Day weekend? I know I do &#8212; there are scads of vacation pictures, silly videos and MP3s that have got to get gone from my laptop hard drive and onto some standby storage. That&#8217;s why I was excited to see Amazon&#8217;s one-day deal (8/28 only, probably cutting off at midnight PT but I can&#8217;t be sure) on the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0012GK3MQ/">Western Digital 250 GB Passport</a> drive: $90US, and eligible for free shipping with Amazon Prime. Giga-licious, although <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/07/09/new-improved-drobo/">250 GB isn&#8217;t as big as it used to be&#8230;</a></p>
<p>I&#8217;ve gotten plenty of reliable use out of my own identical WD 250 Passport, which has a bus-powered USB port and a sleek black finish (makes it kind of hard to see on my desk, but that&#8217;s another matter). No other connection to WD or <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/tag/Amazon/">Amazon</a>, except as a satisfied customer. I believe the drive ships formatted with cross-platform <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/search/?q=FAT32">FAT32</a>, but as all savvy Mac users know, you&#8217;re best off reformatting as <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/search/?q=HFS+">HFS+</a> when you get the drive &#8212; otherwise you&#8217;ll be cringing when you try to copy those larger-than-4-GB video files that FAT32 doesn&#8217;t support.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re looking for more Labor Day deals, buzz by <a href="http://dealmac.com">dealmac.com</a> for the latest updates and discounts.<br />
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<p><a href=http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0012GK3MQ/>Read</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/one-day-deal-on-wd-250gb-portable-drive/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent link to this entry">Permalink</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/forward/1298471/" title="Send this entry to a friend via email">Email this</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/one-day-deal-on-wd-250gb-portable-drive/#comments" title="View reader comments on this entry">Comments</a></p>
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<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://feeds.tuaw.com/~r/weblogsinc/tuaw/~3/377542967/'> continued here </a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>My Favorite iPhone Apps: Erica&#8217;s Take</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/my-favorite-iphone-apps-ericas-take/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/my-favorite-iphone-apps-ericas-take/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 13:08:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[Filed under: iPod Family, iPhone, App Store
When it comes to the iPhone, it&#8217;s really really difficult to narrow my app love down to just three picks. So with apologies in advance for all those amazing applications that didn&#8217;t make this cut, let me jump in with three choices that I simply do not live without [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Filed under: <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/ipodfamily/" rel="tag">iPod Family</a>, <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/iphone/" rel="tag">iPhone</a>, <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/app-store/" rel="tag">App Store</a></p>
<p><img vspace="8" hspace="8" border="1" align="right" src="http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.tuaw.com/media/2008/08/iphonesync4ever0808.jpg" alt="favorite iphone applications" />When it comes to the <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/tag/iPhone/">iPhone</a>, it&#8217;s really really difficult to narrow my app love down to just three picks. So with apologies in advance for all those amazing applications that didn&#8217;t make this cut, let me jump in with three choices that I simply do not live without on my iPhone:</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.telesphoreo.org/">Cydia</a></strong>. When Jay Freeman&#8217;s Cydia first debuted, I was hesitant to use it. It sucked up the root partition space like a sponge and its interface was, at best, preliminary. And now, in 2.0, Cydia owns me. It&#8217;s simply fabulous. From its command-line Unix support to its fully overhauled interface to its extremely workable update system, Cydia provides a powerful software distribution system, perfect for modern smartphones and a great competitor to AppStore.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://code.google.com/p/bossprefs/">Boss Prefs</a></strong>. Boss Prefs offers a wonderful services application. It lets me enable and disable services such as EDGE, Bluetooth and SSH from a central application. Because I only intermittently subscribe to data plans, Boss Prefs ensures that I won&#8217;t accidentally start downloading a la carte data that starts at about $500 million (or so) per kilobyte. It also lets me enable and disable my mail accounts, so the iPhone works perfectly for whichever mode I&#8217;m in: intrepid TUAW blogger at large or private Soccer Mom on the go.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=284960250&amp;mt=8">Othello</a></strong>. Othello is my current fidget-game-on-the-go. When I&#8217;m stuck waiting somewhere for a few minutes, I pull out Hongtao Guo&#8217;s perfect take on Othello. With three playing levels, optional sound and a really nicely designed interface, Othello provides the perfect time waster. There are other free versions of Othello under various names on AppStore but I particularly like this implementation. Although I wish it would put me directly into the game board rather than the welcome screen, that&#8217;s my only criticism of a lovely, free application that&#8217;s a great deal of fun.</p>
<h6 style="clear: both; padding: 8px 0 0 0; height: 2px; font-size: 1px; border: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;"></h6>
<p><a href=http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=284960250&amp;mt=8>Read</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/my-favorite-iphone-apps-ericas-take/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent link to this entry">Permalink</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/forward/1297899/" title="Send this entry to a friend via email">Email this</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/28/my-favorite-iphone-apps-ericas-take/#comments" title="View reader comments on this entry">Comments</a></p>
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		<title>BBEdit - 9.0</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/bbedit-90/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/bbedit-90/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 16:08:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[

Download &#124;
Comments &#124; Homepage &#124;
Changelog

It doesn&#8217;t suck.
BBEdit is the leading professional HTML and text editor for the Macintosh. Specifically crafted in response to the needs of Web authors and software developers, this award-winning  &#8230;

	1065usethis
  Version: 9.0
  License: Commercial with demo

Changes
This page documents all feature enhancements and visible changes included in the BBEdit [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img align="right" src="http://osx.iusethis.com/icon/osx/bbedit.png"/></p>
<p>
<a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/download/28">Download</a> |<br />
<a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/bbedit">Comments</a> | <a href="http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/index.shtml">Homepage</a> |<br />
<a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/versions/28">Changelog</a>
</p>
<p>It doesn&#8217;t suck.</p>
<p>BBEdit is the leading professional HTML and text editor for the Macintosh. Specifically crafted in response to the needs of Web authors and software developers, this award-winning <a href="/app/bbedit"> &hellip;</a></p>
<p>
	<b><a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/users/28">1065</a></b>usethis<br />
  Version: <b><a href="http://osx.iusethis.com/app/versions/28">9.0</a></b><br />
  License: <b>Commercial with demo</b>
</p>
<h3>Changes</h3>
<p>This page documents all feature enhancements and visible changes included in the <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit 9.0 upgrade.</p>
<p>For detailed information on using any of <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit&rsquo;s features, please refer to the user manual (choose &ldquo;User Manual&rdquo; from <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit&rsquo;s Help menu).</p>
<p>Requirements</p>
<p><span class="caps">BBE</span>dit 9.0 requires Mac OS X 10.4 or later.</p>
<p>This version is a Universal Binary: it runs natively on both Intel-based and PowerPC-based Macs.</p>
<p>Additions</p>
<p>The text views in browsing windows (disk browsers, search results, P4 opened, and similar) are now editable; rather than having to open a file into a new window from such a browser, you can just edit it right in the window.<br />
There is a new command on the Window menu: Show Scratchpad<br />
The Scratchpad window&rsquo;s purpose is to be a space where you can manipulate text by performing transforms, manual edits, or batches of copy/paste.</p>
<p>It is ideal for quickly beating text from one source into submission before pasting it elsewhere.</p>
<p>The Scratchpad window automatically saves its content and state, eliminating those pesky &ldquo;Save Untitled 237?&rdquo; warnings when closing a window, or quitting <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit.</p>
<p>The Scratchpad is also available from <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit&rsquo;s dock menu.</p>
<p>Finally, there is a new item on <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit&rsquo;s Services menu: Append Selection to Scratchpad. This command will take the selected text, and place it at the end of the scratchpad, attempting to preserve any selection that was previously present. The Scratchpad window does <span class="caps">NOT </span>need to be open to use this command. Any text appended in this fashion will be present the next time the window is opened.</p>
<p>Added a missing Migration command (change column) to the clipping set for Ruby/Rails.<br />
Added &ldquo;Save as Styled Text&rdquo; to the File menu, and &ldquo;Copy as Styled Text&rdquo; to the Edit menu. These function similarly to their <span class="caps">HTML </span>analogs, but the Save variant saves an <span class="caps">RTF </span>file, and the Copy variant copies styled text (which is more easily shared with other applications).<br />
Added &ldquo;Multi-File Search&rdquo; command to the Find menu. This unconditionally opens the Find dialog with the &ldquo;Multi-File Search&rdquo; option turned on.<br />
There is a new command on the File menu: &ldquo;Reload from Disk&rdquo;. This command will examine the file on disk, and if it&rsquo;s different, reload the front document&rsquo;s contents from the file on disk. This is useful in situations where the file may have changed without <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit noticing, which will be the case if &ldquo;Automatically refresh documents&rdquo; is turned off in the Application preferences, or in the case of a document on a shared disk that gets modified by another workstation.<br />
When running on Mac OS X 10.5 or later, the &ldquo;Colors&rdquo; command is available on the Windows -&gt; Palettes menu. This command shows and hides the system color panel.<br />
There&rsquo;s a new option in the &ldquo;Insert Folder Listing&rdquo; dialog: &ldquo;Show invisible items&rdquo;. If turned on, the generated listing will include invisible files/folders and the contents of packages.<br />
There&rsquo;s a new group of sources in the Find dialog&rsquo;s source list: &ldquo;Xcode Projects&rdquo;. This group shows the projects in Xcode&rsquo;s Recent Projects menu; selecting one (or more) will instruct the multi-file search to search each text file in the project.<br />
Find Differences now uses the system diff tool for generating the difference ranges displayed in the application. This should result in more usable results.<br />
<span class="caps">RCS </span>keywords are canonicalized down to their unexpanded state for comparison.<br />
e.g. $Author: Jim Correia$ -&gt; $Author$</p>
<p>This means that &ldquo;ignore <span class="caps">RCS </span>keywords&rdquo; isn&rsquo;t literal, but it does what you&rsquo;d expect.</p>
<p>changes in <span class="caps">RCS </span>keyword expansion state are not diff significant<br />
adding new <span class="caps">RCS </span>keywords to a file/line is diff significant<br />
any other changes on a line with <span class="caps">RCS </span>keywords is diff significant<br />
Stuff copied to the clipboard carries a source language hint. Pasting into a document whose source language is unknown will cause the document to inherit the clipboard&rsquo;s hint.<br />
Dragging text into an empty document from another editing view will now pick up the source language from the originating view.<br />
The C/C++/Obj-C/Obj-C++ scanner now generates fold ranges for multi-line parenthesis blocks (including argument lists), subject to the  MinimumLinesForBlockFold preference.<br />
&ldquo;New (with selection)&rdquo; and &ldquo;New (with clipboard)&rdquo; now create the new document using the language of the selection or clipboard (respectively).<br />
The Navigation bar has a document/state dirty indicator, so those inclined to disable the toolbar and ignore the close box indication have some way to see if a document is dirty or not.<br />
The Ruby language support has been rewritten, with improvements as follows:<br />
greatly improved function, class, and module detection.<br />
more extensive support for text folding.<br />
Better handles interpretive strings. The following:<br />
puts &#8220;d#{&#8221;rie&#8221;}w&#8221;.reverse</p>
<p>&#8230; should show only &#8220;d#{&#8221;rie&#8221;}w&#8221; colored as a string when in a Ruby file (new module).</p>
<p>Better handles the optional then at the end of if or  elsif statement.<br />
Significant update to the JavaScript module. Better support for Prototype-style object definitions, more consistent throughout.<br />
<span class="caps">BBE</span>dit&rsquo;s support for ctags files has been improved:<br />
relative paths in tags files are now interpreted (relative to the tags file&rsquo;s location); there is no more need to go through all kinds of gyrations to generate absolute paths in tags files, just so that <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit can locate the symbol definition.<br />
<span class="caps">BBE</span>dit now supports old-format tags files which contain a vi search string but no line number information.<br />
When loading symbols for ctags syntax coloring, <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit will look for files named &ldquo;tags&rdquo; in each folder in the chain from the current document&rsquo;s folder up to the root of the file system. This improves symbol lookups for projects that aren&rsquo;t structured exactly like ours. <img src='http://www.ultimate-apple.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':-)' class='wp-smiley' /> <br />
If you have a .Mac/MobileMe account, you can use it to keep your Application Support folder synchronized across machines. The preference to control sync frequency is located in the &ldquo;Application&rdquo; preference pane.<br />
There are no controls to force syncing, or provide any sort of user control over what does or does not sync. Just be patient, and don&rsquo;t try to rush the sync engine. <img src='http://www.ultimate-apple.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':-)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>Added ObjectiveC 2.0 keywords to the Obj-C and Obj-C++ language modules.<br />
Documents as a scriptable element of text window can now be accessed by name and unique <span class="caps">ID. </span>(Previously, only indexed access was supported.)<br />
&ldquo;Open Counterpart&rdquo; can now be used for files which will be implictly created at save; for example, bbedit foo.h followed by an Open Counterpart command will open foo.cp if it can be found using the standard rules.<br />
<span class="caps">BBE</span>dit can now detect versions of Application Support/BBEdit that were created by previous versions. If the folders have not been changed (NOS, for &ldquo;New Old Stock&rdquo;), they will be silently upgraded to the current version. When a <span class="caps">NOS </span>support folder is detected, it is backed up to ~/Application Support/BBEdit Backups, then replaced with the latest contents.<br />
If a <span class="caps">NOS</span> Glossary folder is detected, it is backed up, removed, then replaced with the latest Clippings folder.</p>
<p>There&rsquo;s a new preference in Text Status Display: &ldquo;Document statistics&rdquo;. When turned on, this will add an item to the window status bar, showing the number of characters, words, and lines in the document. There&rsquo;s also a document-icon indicator; when it&rsquo;s uncolored the stats represent the entire document; when it&rsquo;s colored the stats represent the selection range. (Click on the item to toggle between the modes.)<br />
<span class="caps">BBE</span>dit now includes a set of clippings for quickly inserting and completing <span class="caps">PHP </span>functions. Thanks to Ted Stresen-Reuter for his generous contribution.<br />
You can now double-click on a string delimiter to select the contents of a quoted string, in files with syntax coloring turned on. The selection range honors the &ldquo;Include delimiter characters when balancing&rdquo; setting in the Editing: General prefs. You can also double-click on an element&rsquo;s angle bracket in <span class="caps">HTML</span>/XML documents to select the contents of the element.<br />
<span class="caps">BBE</span>dit can now transparently read and write text files compressed with bz2 (e.g. rolled system logs in 10.5) as easily as it reads and writes regular text documents (and, as a reminder, gzipped text files). For bonus points, try opening and changing a binary plist compressed with bz2. <img src='http://www.ultimate-apple.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':-)' class='wp-smiley' /> <br />
When &ldquo;Make backup before saving&rdquo; is turned on in the Text Files prefs, and you close a document with unsaved changes and elect to discard those changes (&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t Save&rdquo;), <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit will save a snapshot of the document&rsquo;s contents. Just in case. The snapshot will be written into the same directory as the document, and its name will follow the Emacs convention &ldquo;#foo.txt#&rdquo;. If &ldquo;Preserve file name extension&rdquo; is turned on, the snapshot&rsquo;s name will be &ldquo;#foo#.txt&rdquo;.<br />
You can now use an Emacs variable to control whether or not a given file is backed up. There are two ways to do this:<br />
Absolute: If the variable line/block contains a &ldquo;make-backup-files&rdquo; variable, that variable&rsquo;s value will override the global &ldquo;Make Backup before saving&rdquo; preference.<br />
<del><strong></del> make-backup-files: 1 <del></strong></del> &mdash;&gt; always back up this file <del><strong></del> make-backup-files: 0 <del></strong></del> &mdash;&gt; never back up this file</p>
<p>If the first letter of the variable&rsquo;s value is &ldquo;y&rdquo;, &ldquo;t&rdquo;, or &ldquo;1&rdquo;, the value is &ldquo;yes&rdquo;, otherwise it&rsquo;s &ldquo;no&rdquo;. These are all synonymous:</p>
<p>make-backup-files: yes<br />
make-backup-files: y<br />
make-backup-files: true<br />
make-backup-files: t<br />
make-backup-files: 1<br />
Inhibit: If the variable&rsquo;s line/block contains a &ldquo;backup-inhibited&rdquo; variable, and its value is true (see above), then the file will never be backed up, even if &ldquo;Make backup before saving&rdquo; is turned on in the global preferences.<br />
It really only makes sense to specify &ldquo;backup-inhibited: 1&rdquo;, since otherwise the file would be backed up if the global pref is on, and not otherwise.</p>
<p>If a symbol lookup in a Python file fails, and it appears to be a method of a class, we&rsquo;ll try to look up the class.method as well.<br />
Projects.<br />
A project is the modern expression of the old &ldquo;File Group&rdquo; feature, but much more useful, chiefly because project windows now include an editing view: click on a file in the list on the left, and it appears for editing in the pane on the right.</p>
<p>To create a new project, choose File -&gt; New -&gt; Project&hellip; You will need to decide where to place your project on disk; thereafter, the project document will autosave as necessary.</p>
<p>In the project window, you can hide the top toolbar as desired. If the toolbar is hidden, the action buttons in the lower left corner of the file list remain useful for manipulating the project&rsquo;s members.</p>
<p><span class="caps">BBE</span>dit now handles the (badly chosen, since it omits the &ldquo;x-&rdquo; prefix) &ldquo;txmt:&rdquo; <span class="caps">URL </span>scheme. This allows properly formed &ldquo;txmt:&rdquo; <span class="caps">URL</span>s generated by the Ruby On Rails &ldquo;FootNotes&rdquo; plug-in (and some others) to open files in <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit and (optionally) select a requested line and column. (NB: If the system doesn&rsquo;t correctly recognize <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit as an allowable handler for such <span class="caps">URL</span>s, <span class="caps">RCD</span>efaultApp is a good tool for adjusting the bindings.)<br />
The is now a &ldquo;Close All&rdquo; dynamic menu item on the action menu in the documents drawer. This is particularly useful for closing all the documents associated with a project window without closing the project itself.<br />
Also, option-clicking on a close widget in the documents drawer will close all the text documents in that window. (MDI text windows will also close as a side effect, but project windows will remain open.)</p>
<p>The Application menu sports a new item: Provide <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit Feedback. This command will ask your default email client to compose a pre-addressed message to support@barebones.com, with with the application name, version number and build number in the message subject.<br />
Selected items in project lists and disk browser lists are now exported to contextual menu plug-ins.<br />
Added &ldquo;Collapse Enclosing Fold&rdquo; to the View menu; this command will collapse the auto-generated fold that most closely surrounds the current insertion point (or start of the selection range).<br />
Changes to split views in results and disk browsers:<br />
There is a new command on the view menu &ldquo;Show/Hide Editor&rdquo; which can be used to toggle the embedded editor visibility in disk browsers and results browsers.</p>
<p>The toggle editor button in the action bar at the bottom of the file list can also be used for this purpose.</p>
<p>When hiding the embedded editor, the associated document will be removed from the window (and closed, after prompting you, if it was not open elsewhere.) Because of this potential need for user interaction, you cannot collape the editing view entirely by dragging the view splitter; you must use the button, menu command (or in the case of results browsers, a double click on the view splitter.)</p>
<p>Added a &ldquo;Delete&rdquo; command to the contextual menu and action menu in disk browsers.<br />
Search Sources can be enabled/disabled via the Text Search preference pane.<br />
Option-clicking the close widget in the windows palette will close all windows. (This matches the same conceptual change made to the documents drawer list, as well as the standard behavior for option-clicking the close widget in the titlebar of windows.)<br />
Added rudimentary support for define_method to the Ruby module. Methods defined with it should be listed in the function popup. Yay, metaprogramming.<br />
&ldquo;Open Counterpart&rdquo; will ask Xcode for the file&rsquo;s counterparts when possible.<br />
The items in the &ldquo;Saved Search Sets&rdquo; source group (for multi-file searches) now have an &ldquo;X&rdquo; widget; clicking the X deletes the search set (after confirmation).<br />
Items in the &ldquo;Recent Folders&rdquo; group in the multi-file search sources list now have an &ldquo;X&rdquo; widget; clicking the X will delete the recent item from the list (without disturbing the folder that it refers to).<br />
Disk browsers get &ldquo;New Text Document&rdquo; and &ldquo;New Folder&rdquo; commands on the action and contextual menus. They work pretty much as one would expect.<br />
Script tags in <span class="caps">HTML </span>files which DO <span class="caps">NOT </span>have a src attribute are now listed in the function popup (those with src are already listed in the &ldquo;includes&rdquo; popup). This is similar to the <span class="caps">STYLE </span>entry for stylesheets: functions and objects added to the function popup as a result of the script tag are indented beneath the script tag&rsquo;s entry, to suggest containment.<br />
New Find windows!<br />
There are new Find and Multi-file Search windows; where they overlap, they provide a consistent and modeless interface to <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit&rsquo;s legendary text search and replace capabilities.</p>
<p>If you&rsquo;re familiar with the old Find dialog, you&rsquo;ll generally feel at home, but there are some important differences and additions of which you should be aware:</p>
<p>The Find dialog has been split in two, with one window for searching only the front document, and one window for searching more than one document (including folders, arbitrary open documents, <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit and Xcode projects, and so forth).<br />
The (fairly confusing) collection of options to configure which text actually gets searched (for single-file searches) has been condensed down to a single pair of &ldquo;Search in:&rdquo; options: &ldquo;Selected text only&rdquo; and &ldquo;Wrap around&rdquo;.<br />
&ldquo;Selected text only&rdquo; affects only the &ldquo;Find All&rdquo; and &ldquo;Replace All&rdquo; operations: if there is a selection range in the front document, this option will search only the selection range if turned on, or the entire document (starting from the top) if turned off.</p>
<p>&ldquo;Wrap around&rdquo; affects only the &ldquo;Next&rdquo;, &ldquo;Previous&rdquo;, &ldquo;Replace&rdquo;, and &ldquo;Replace &amp; Find&rdquo; operations: if the search reaches the end of the document (or the beginning, if doing a &ldquo;Previous&rdquo;), then &ldquo;Wrap around&rdquo; will continue the search from the appropriate end of the document.</p>
<p>Keyboard navigation is radically different (as it must be, given the new windows&rsquo; modeless nature).<br />
Return or Enter in the &ldquo;Find&rdquo; field will do a &ldquo;Next&rdquo; in the single-Find window, or a &ldquo;Find All&rdquo; in the Multi-File Search window.<br />
Striking the Escape key (not too hard!) will close the window.<br />
The appropriate commands on the Search menu (Find Next, Find Previous, Replace, Replace All, Replace &amp; Find Again, and a new &ldquo;Find All&rdquo;) will trigger the corresponding action in the front Find window.<br />
It&rsquo;s not possible to use the command-key equivalents from the old modal Find dialog for toggling items in the Find window, because those equivalents collide with factory keyboard equivalents (or system standards) for different menu commands. So there&rsquo;s a new group of keyboard equivalents for controlling Find and Multi-File Search window items. These keys can be set in Preferences -&gt; Menus -&gt; Find Windows.<br />
The factory defaults for these keys are as follows:</p>
<p>Case sensitive	 Control-shift-N<br />
Entire word	 Control-Shift-E<br />
Grep	 Control-Shift-G<br />
Selected text only	 Control-Shift-S<br />
Wrap around	 Control-Shift-W<br />
Open search history	 Control-Shift-H (new)<br />
Open saved patterns	 Control-Shift-P (new)<br />
If you are in the habit of assigning keyboard equivalents to saved clippings, it&rsquo;s possible that these defaults may overlap with your clippings. If so, you can of course change the commands from the factory defaults.</p>
<p>In the Multi-file Search window, you can use the keyboard when the search sources list has focus, as follows:<br />
Return/Enter starts the search;<br />
Escape dismisses the window;<br />
Type-to-select works in the list (when it has focus);<br />
Space toggles the selected items;<br />
Delete removes the selected items from the list (after confirmation, and only if they&rsquo;re eligible as indicated by the &ldquo;X&rdquo; widget).<br />
If you find yourself more comfortable with the old interface, you can continue to use it by turning on &ldquo;Use modal Find dialog&rdquo; in Preferences -&gt; Text Search.</p>
<p>Search and replace history is now persistent across runs of the application.<br />
Image windows update their content when the backing file changes, making things like developing <span class="caps">POVR</span>ay scripts a little bit easier.<br />
Changes to the project list user interaction model.<br />
Removed the anachronistic behavior where holding down option while opening project items opened them using their LS/Finder bindings.<br />
Double clicking on a folder no longer opens a disk browser. Instead, it toggles the expansion state of that node.<br />
When the editor is hidden, the projects list works as it did in previous releases. That is</p>
<p>it accepts keyboard focus<br />
return and double-click open the selected items<br />
When the project editor is visible, the project list can either work the same was as it does when the editor is hidden, or it can work in &ldquo;single-click&rdquo; mode.</p>
<p>There are two additional secret preferences which control this behavior.</p>
<p>Projects:ProjectsListCanAcquireKeyboardFocus -&gt; <span class="caps">BOOL </span>-&gt; NO<br />
Projects:OpenItemsOnSingleClick -&gt; <span class="caps">BOOL </span>-&gt; <span class="caps">YES</span><br />
Having the list not accept keyboard focus, among other things, avoids &ldquo;dancing focus&rdquo; when opening items via single click.</p>
<p>When the single click setting is set, most single clicks will open the associated document in the attached editor, and put keyboard focus in the editing view.</p>
<p>Certain single clicks don&rsquo;t result in an open action. (I&rsquo;m specifically not listing them all here, but the behavior has been carefully designed so that it will feel right in usage. Examples include clicks which would require we spawn a window, clicks which extend the selection, etc.)</p>
<p>Added a &ldquo;Reveal in Finder&rdquo; command to disk browser and project windows.<br />
For compatibility with scripts written for pre-9.0 versions of <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit, the scripting interface now performs the following name mapping when changing the &ldquo;text encoding&rdquo; property of a document:<br />
&ldquo;Unicode&trade; (UTF-8)&rdquo; = &ldquo;Unicode (UTF-8)&rdquo;<br />
&ldquo;Unicode&trade; (UTF-8, no <span class="caps">BOM</span>)&rdquo; = &ldquo;Unicode (UTF-8, no <span class="caps">BOM</span>)&rdquo;<br />
&ldquo;Unicode&trade; (UTF-16)&rdquo; = &ldquo;Unicode (UTF-16)&rdquo;<br />
&ldquo;Unicode&trade; (UTF-16, no <span class="caps">BOM</span>)&rdquo; = &ldquo;Unicode (UTF-16, no <span class="caps">BOM</span>)&rdquo;<br />
&ldquo;Unicode&trade; (UTF-16 Little-Endian)&rdquo; = &ldquo;Unicode (UTF-16 Little-Endian)&rdquo;<br />
&ldquo;Unicode&trade; (UTF-16 Little-Endian, no <span class="caps">BOM</span>)&rdquo; = &ldquo;Unicode (UTF-16 Little-Endian, no <span class="caps">BOM</span>)&rdquo;<br />
Note that this transformation does not operate in the reverse direction; if you get the text encoding property and explicitly compare the name, you will need to update your script.</p>
<p>Integrated Jim&rsquo;s .ini language module.<br />
C-language files (and all related languages, like Obj-C, C++ and header files) will now show <span class="caps">FIXME </span>and <span class="caps">TODO </span>items in the function popup. Only &rdquo;//&rdquo; comments are searched, and the comment must start with one of the following: &ldquo;FIXME:&rdquo; &ldquo;FIXME!&rdquo; &ldquo;FIX-ME:&rdquo; &ldquo;FIX-ME!&rdquo; &ldquo;TODO:&rdquo; &ldquo;TODO!&rdquo; &ldquo;TO-DO:&rdquo; or &ldquo;TO-DO!&rdquo;. The text added to the function popup starts with the first character of the <span class="caps">FIXME </span>or  <span class="caps">TODO </span>and ends with the last non-white character on the same line.<br />
Examples:</p>
<p>// <span class="caps">FIXME</span> This little bug could erase the intertubes.<br />
// <span class="caps">TODO</span>! Add support for Apple&#39;s &#8220;Crash Only When Convenient&#8221;<br />
The command formerly known as &ldquo;Open in Separate Window&rdquo; is now called &ldquo;Move to New Window&rdquo;. It will move the current document (or selected documents when invoked from the documents drawer) into a new editing window (removing them from their current editing window.)<br />
There is an additional command &ldquo;Open in Additional Window&rdquo; which will open the current document (or selected documents when invoked from the documents drawer) in an additional window that can be edited side by side with the original document.</p>
<p>Both commands are only available for text documents.</p>
<p>Ponies.<br />
Attempting to bring up a contextual menu in the &ldquo;dead&rdquo; space at the bottom of a disk browser list now works, presenting you with &ldquo;globally&rdquo; available commands New Folder and New Text Document.<br />
The application automatically saves its state (open documents and windows) once per minute, so if something bad happens to your machine, there&rsquo;s a pretty good chance that the next time you start up, things will be as they were when the event occurred.<br />
Python function decorator names are now detected and colored.<br />
You can drag stuff to the sources list for Text Factory configuration<br />
The Text Factory sources list remembers selected items and twist state between invocations.<br />
Text completion!<br />
<span class="caps">BBE</span>dit can now figure out completions for symbols as you&rsquo;re editing. The preference for controlling when this happens is in the &ldquo;Editing: General&rdquo; preferences:</p>
<p>After a delay in typing<br />
If you pause briefly while typing, <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit will figure out the completions for what you just typed, and display them.</p>
<p>The delay can be adjusted from the command line if desired:</p>
<p>defaults write com.barebones.bbedit Editor:AutoCompleteDelay -float 0.5 # sets the auto-complete delay to half a second</p>
<p>Only manually<br />
Completion will only take place when using a manual completion command (see below).</p>
<p>Automatic completion can be turned on and off on a per-language basis (in the Languages preferences) if desired. It is off by default for the &ldquo;Log File&rdquo; and &ldquo;Data File&rdquo; languages.</p>
<p>Completions can be derived from a variety of sources, including (in no particular order and without limitation):</p>
<p>clippings (both language-specific and universal);<br />
ctags symbols computed by running the current document through &lsquo;ctags&rsquo;;<br />
ctags symbols found in &lsquo;tags&rsquo; files in the current document&rsquo;s hierarchy;<br />
predefined names for the source code language at the point of completion;<br />
language-specific completions;<br />
completions provided by the system spelling system.<br />
Completion may be triggered at any time (whether or not automatic completion is enabled) by using the &ldquo;Complete&rdquo; menu command on the Edit menu. By default, F5 is assigned to this command; you can change this equivalent (as usual) by using the Menus preferences.</p>
<p>Note: Text completion completes clippings in the same way that the &ldquo;Insert Clipping&rdquo; command used to (and still does). So, the behavior of F5 should be indistinguishable if you were used to using it to complete clippings.</p>
<p>You can also use the Escape (&ldquo;Esc&rdquo;) key to invoke text completion. This is off by default, and may be turned on using the command line, as follows:</p>
<ol>
<li>allow the Escape key to invoke the &#8220;Complete&#8221; command defaults write com.barebones.bbedit Editor:UseEscapeKeyAsCompletionTrigger -bool <span class="caps">YES</span></li>
</ol>
<p>Note: Because the Escape key has a special meaning when &ldquo;Use Emacs key bindings&rdquo; is turned on (Editing: Keyboard preferences), if you choose to use the Escape key as a completion trigger, you will have to press it twice to invoke completion in this case.</p>
<p>The tab key can now be overloaded to perform certain actions in addition to the traditional &ldquo;insert a tab&rdquo; (or the equivalent amount of spaces).<br />
When these actions are enabled, holding down the option key while pressing the tab key will bypass the special actions and insert a tab character.</p>
<p>In all cases, if the special action is not appropriate in the current context, pressing the tab key will result in the default behavior (insert tab character).</p>
<p>The first of these new actions is &ldquo;go to next placholder.&rdquo; (Hold down the Shift key to reverse the direction.) This is equivalent to the command on the Search menu. To control this behavior, use the &ldquo;Use Tab key to navigate Placeholders&rdquo; preference (Editing: Keyboard).<br />
For refugees from Windows who are used to having Tab indent a line (or selected range of lines), there&rsquo;s a new preference in Editing: Keyboard: &ldquo;Allow Tab key to indent text blocks.&rdquo; When turned on, this setting allows Tab to function as a synonym for Shift Right on the Edit menu (and Shift-Tab as a synonym for Shift Left).<br />
There&rsquo;s a new color setting in the Text Colors preferences: &ldquo;Predefined names&rdquo;. This symbol class is used for words which are not language keywords, but which are predefined by the language&rsquo;s reference implementation and/or are part of the language&rsquo;s standard library/framework support and/or have other &ldquo;special&rdquo; meaning to developers writing code in that language.<br />
The color may be changed on a per-language basis in the Languages preferences: double-click on the language&rsquo;s name in the list and examine the Colors tab in the resulting sheet.</p>
<p>Language module developers may use the following constructs to support predefined names:<br />
If a <span class="caps">BBLMP</span>redefinedNameList key appears in the module&rsquo;s property list, it is an array of strings, each of which is a predefined name. (This key is mutually exclusive with <span class="caps">BBLMP</span>redefinedNameFileName; you may use one or the other but not both.)<br />
If a <span class="caps">BBLMP</span>redefinedNameFileName key appears in the module&rsquo;s property list, it is a string which names a text file in the module&rsquo;s Resources bundle directory; the file contains one predefined name per line. (This key is mutually exclusive with <span class="caps">BBLMP</span>redefinedNameList; you may use one or the other but not both.)<br />
If <span class="caps">BBLMS</span>upportsPredefinedNameLookups appears in the module&rsquo;s property list and is <span class="caps">TRUE, BBE</span>dit may call the module with the kBBLMMatchPredefinedNameMessage. The parameters for this message are the same as for kBBLMMatchKeywordWithCFStringMessage.<br />
In the Languages prefs, the options sheet for Python now has a tab for Python-specific options, in which you can choose the color to use for decorators.<br />
Reworked the existing entries in the <span class="caps">CSS </span>clipping set to use the placeholder mechanism.<br />
Added a couple of new useful entries to the <span class="caps">CSS </span>clipping set for @media, @import and rule sets.</p>
<p>Added .php5 to the factory default list of language mappings.<br />
Clipping set auto-switching is now more context sensitive. The active clipping set will be picked based on the language of the insertion point. This is a significant improvement particularly when working with languages embedded in <span class="caps">HTML. </span>(CSS, JavaScript, Ruby, <span class="caps">PHP, </span>etc.)<br />
The list of clippings generated for text completion or Insert Clipping is always language sensitive. Clippings will be picked from<br />
- all appropriate sets for the current language - additional sets appropriate for that language (e.g. <span class="caps">HTML </span>for Ruby in <span class="caps">HTML </span>or <span class="caps">JSP</span>) - possibly the active set (see below) - the universal set</p>
<p>This makes it much more likely that you&rsquo;ll end up with a useful clipping in the completion set.</p>
<p>The active set is always included for &ldquo;Insert Clipping&rdquo;. It is only included in completion set if it is appropriate for the current language, or was a manual pick for the target document. (This avoids having <span class="caps">PHP </span>clippings appear in a Python file, for example, because you don&rsquo;t have a Python clipping set and the <span class="caps">PHP </span>set was the last one used.)</p>
<p>You can now review and apply sub-line differences individually in the results of Find Differences.<br />
Yeah, you heard that right.</p>
<p>New command on the Search menu: &ldquo;Replace to End&rdquo;. This command provides the pre-9.0 behavior for anyone who needs it: everything is processed from the current insertion point or start of the selection range to the end of the document.<br />
When setting up the default browser list for <span class="caps">HTML </span>previews, we now recognize application stubs created by <span class="caps">VMW</span>are 2.0&rsquo;s &ldquo;Unity&rdquo; feature, so that you can preview your documents in FireFox or Windows IE while running in <span class="caps">VMW</span>are 2.0.<br />
If you have an existing browser list, you can as always add these applications to the list in the &ldquo;HTML Preview&rdquo; preferences, either manually or by using the &ldquo;Find All&rdquo; button.</p>
<p>Added a new clippings placeholder: #selectionorplaceholder placeholder_name#.<br />
If the document has a selection when the clipping is inserted, the placeholder will be replaced with the selected text. If there is no selection, a placeholder named &ldquo;placeholder_name&rdquo; will be inserted into the document.</p>
<p>This placeholder is particularly useful when building &ldquo;dual-mode&rdquo; clippings &ndash; that is clippings that are designed to be inserted via traditional means (the clippings palette, keybindings) or via the completion mechanism.</p>
<p>Changes</p>
<p>Fixed misleading wording in the alert for running #! scripts with non-Unix line breaks.<br />
New and improved software update checker, the same as the one used in Yojimbo 1.5.<br />
When a browser has nothing selected, or has a deleted file selected (like in a P4 window), the combined text view is replaced with a status view, telling you so.<br />
The mechanics that <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit uses to determine whether a file was changed on disk have been completely rewritten. Consequently, the group of &ldquo;Verify open files after:&rdquo; preferences (see Application prefs) has been replaced by a single setting: &ldquo;Automatically refresh documents as they change on disk.&rdquo; If you wish, you may turn this off and reload a document manually at any time by choosing the &ldquo;Reload from Disk&rdquo; command on the File menu.<br />
Document drawer side bias is no loner controllable from the prefs <span class="caps">UI.</span><br />
Expunged references to the &ldquo;Open Here in Terminal&rdquo; bundle override, since that feature is no longer supported.<br />
Tightened up the layout of the disk browser window and dropped the focus ring around the file list.<br />
The &ldquo;Save As&rdquo; and &ldquo;Save a Copy&rdquo; dialogs now run as sheets, as does the dialog for the &ldquo;Save Selection&rdquo; contextual menu item.<br />
&ldquo;Save As&rdquo; for Find Differences results windows has been changed to &ldquo;Export&rdquo; for consistency with results browser windows.<br />
The &ldquo;Save As Selection&rdquo; command has been consigned to the dustbin of history.<br />
Support for the CodeWarrior <span class="caps">IDE </span>has been removed. If you are still using <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit as an external editor for CodeWarrior, you can run 8.7.2 alongside 9.0.<br />
In a results browser, the Save command (or apple event) now works on the viewed document. The Export event or command can be used to write out a text file containing the results entries. (This was previously accomplished via the Save As command.)<br />
When writing data to the pasteboard (clipboard or drag), <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit now also includes a <span class="caps">UTF</span>-8/NSStringPboardType copy of the data with LF line endings. This provides smoother interoperability with Cocoa applications which are not line ending agnostic. (Or more specifically, do not convert the pasteboard data to their native internal representation, often resulting in a mixed line ending document.)<br />
<span class="caps">N.B. BBE</span>dit has always been line ending agnostic when reading data from the pasteboard.</p>
<p>The window menu and windows palette are named differently, so multiple results browsers pointing at the same document are easier to distinguish from each other.<br />
If the search terms are available at window construction time, Search Results windows include them in the base window name in preference to the instance number, so instead of getting &ldquo;Search Results 42 (search term)&rdquo;, it&rsquo;s now just &ldquo;Search Results (search term)&rdquo;.<br />
The options and behavior for backing up files at save have changed, as follows:<br />
&ldquo;Make backup before saving&rdquo; is now a global preference only, and is no longer controlled per file. The &ldquo;Make Backup when Saving&rdquo; and &ldquo;Make Backup Now&rdquo; options have been removed from the File menu.<br />
The settings controlling backup location (in the Text Files prefs) have been removed. Backups are always made to a specific location, as follows:<br />
If &ldquo;Keep historical backups&rdquo; is turned on, backups are kept in ~/Documents/BBEdit Backups/. Within that folder is one folder for each day&rsquo;s backups. The format of the dated folder name is static and non-localized: <span class="caps">YYYY</span>-MM-DD. Inside of each day&rsquo;s backup folder will be all of the backups made on that day, each named using the 8.7.x timestamp format.<br />
If you want the backups to live somewhere else, lay down a folder alias named &ldquo;BBEdit Backups&rdquo; in ~/Documents/ and <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit will follow the alias.</p>
<p>If &ldquo;Keep historical backups&rdquo; is turned off, <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit makes only a single backup, located in the same directory as the original, so &ldquo;backup creep&rdquo; is a thing of the past. The backup is named according to current OS conventions (which themselves follow the old Emacs convention): the backup file is named as the original file, with a tilde appended: &ldquo;foo.html~&rdquo; is the backup of &ldquo;foo.html&rdquo;.<br />
If you want the backup to have the same file name extension as the original, turn on the &ldquo;Preserve file name extension&rdquo; in the Text Files prefs. This will cause <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit to place the tilde after the &ldquo;base&rdquo; name of the file: &ldquo;foo~.html&rdquo;.</p>
<p>The machinery behind the Preferences window has been overhauled; this is not user-visible; however, the layout conventions for the prefs panels have changed, which does affect the overall look of the Preferences window. This will affect screen shots.<br />
Wildcard mappings for filename extensions to source code languages now work the way they were originally intended to; a suffix mapping of &ldquo;php*&rdquo; will now match any file whose filename extension begins with &ldquo;php&rdquo; and ends with anything, rather than attempting to apply the wildcard against the entire file name.<br />
The dialog used for adding and editing filename extension-to-language mappings (in the Languages prefs) has been modernized.<br />
Modernized the options dialog for multi-file Replace All.<br />
The &ldquo;Add&hellip;&rdquo; button for adding Grep patterns in the Text Search preferences has been consigned to the dustbin of history. The &ldquo;Change&rdquo; button has been renamed to &ldquo;Rename&rdquo; to reflect that it now simply renames the selected pattern.<br />
The Application menu and Help menu have been reorganized to follow the conventions established by Apple&rsquo;s current iLife applications.<br />
&ldquo;Check for Updates&rdquo; is now on the application menu.<br />
<span class="caps">BBE</span>dit no longer loads <span class="caps">CFM </span>(Code Fragment Manager, the Mac OS 9 executable format) language modules. If you have such a language module installed, a message will be logged to the system console.<br />
After careful consideration, the &ldquo;Remember Find dialog&#xFFFD;s &#xFFFD;Start at Top&#xFFFD; setting&rdquo; checkbox has been shot, and tossed in a ditch. (The setting is still stored in preferences, and honored if present.)<br />
Significant look-and-feel work on the disk browser: the top bar is gone; the action gear in the lower-left corner has some useful commands on it (a strict superset of what&rsquo;s on the contextual menu), and file filtering control is on the filter popup next to it.<br />
Modernized the Save Workspace and Delete Workspace dialogs. (And the Delete Workspace dialog lets you delete more than one workspace.)<br />
The file filtering options in the Open&hellip; dialog have been simplified to present the following items:<br />
All <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit Documents<br />
Anything that <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit can usefully open into a document window will be enabled for selection. (This is equivalent to the &ldquo;All Readable Files&rdquo; setting in previous versions.)</p>
<p>Text Files Only<br />
Only files that are quickly recognizable as text files (without inspecting their contents) will be enabled for selection. (This is equivalent to the &ldquo;Text Files&rdquo; setting in previous versions.)</p>
<p>Everything<br />
Enables all files for selection, regardless of type. (This is equivalent to the &ldquo;All Files&rdquo; setting in previous versions.)</p>
<p>The file filtering popup in disk browser windows has been reworked to be close to the browser&rsquo;s primary purpose (browsing text files on disk). It now consists of just two items (in addition to user-defined file filters):<br />
Text Files Only Invisible Items</p>
<p>&ldquo;Text Files Only&rdquo; will limit the display to items which pass the text-file test (without examining their content). &ldquo;Invisible Items&rdquo;, if turned off, will limit the display to items which would be visible in the Finder (and also filters out <span class="caps">CVS,</span> Subversion, and package directories).</p>
<p>The factory default keystroke for &ldquo;Open Counterpart&rdquo; has been changed to Command+Option Up-Arrow.<br />
The factory default keyboard shortcuts for &ldquo;Go to Next/Previous Error&rdquo; have been changed to Command+Control Up/Down-Arrow.<br />
The gesture for switching focus from a text view (which normally accepts Tab as an input character) has been changed from Option-Tab to Control-Tab.<br />
Moved File Filters to the main find dialog, as it was in <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit 7.x.<br />
Collapse All Folds now behaves more usefully in documents where there is a single top-level fold (such as <span class="caps">HTML </span>or <span class="caps">XML </span>documents, as well as in a few other situations).<br />
Updated Application Support Folder/Readme.txt with information on backups, and syncing.<br />
Adjusted the layout of the Find dialog, eliminating the Saved Sources popup menu (since they are expressed in the sources list directly), and adding a Save Set button instead.<br />
Saving Search Sets is done in a sheet, instead of application modal dialog.<br />
The separate history popups for search and replace strings have been condensed into one.<br />
The term lists for file filters have been buffed a bit.<br />
The popup menu used for file filtering in the modal Find dialog, Find Differences, the Multi-file Find window, and Text Factory options has been rearranged. In those locations, the separate &ldquo;Use File Filter:&rdquo; check box has been removed; filtering is completely controlled from the menu. (Choose &ldquo;None&rdquo; to turn off filtering.)<br />
The search history item in the modal Find dialog has sharp corners, just like the one in the modeless dialogs.<br />
The command to save Grep patterns from the Find dialog (modal or modeless) is now called &ldquo;Save&rdquo; and it&rsquo;s at the end of the pattern popup in the respective dialog.<br />
The window stacking preference has been retired.<br />
New windows always stack down and right 20px. If you have saved a default window size, and the window is screen height, new windows will just stack to the right, and preserve their saved height.<br />
&ldquo;Find Selected Text (backwards)&rdquo; is now &ldquo;Find Previous Selected Text&rdquo;. (There&rsquo;s really no good wording for it that doesn&rsquo;t make the menu wide. Really, it&rsquo;s &ldquo;Find the previous occurrence of the selected text&rdquo;.)<br />
The <span class="caps">MDI </span>preference no longer has an internal vs. external distinction.<br />
The list of actions in a Text Factory is now sorted alphabetically.<br />
The &rdquo;+&rdquo; and &rdquo;-&rdquo; buttons in Text Factory windows have been adjusted to account for metrics changes in the system.<br />
&ldquo;Replace All&rdquo; in the old modal Find dialog now replaces every occurrence in the document (or in the selected range, if there is one and &ldquo;Search Selection Only&rdquo; is checked), rather than from the insertion point to the end of the document. This makes its behavior consistent with the modeless Find window and the &ldquo;Replace All&rdquo; menu command.<br />
Updated the &ldquo;Clear Markers&rdquo; dialog.<br />
&ldquo;Preview in <span class="caps">BBE</span>dit&rdquo; now factory defaults to Cmd-Control-P (was previously assigned to &ldquo;Preview in &lt;default web browser&gt;&rdquo;.</p>
<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://osx.iusethis.com/app/bbedit'> continued here </a></p>
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		<title>iPhone 3G in Canada: Rogers Extends $30/6GB to Sept. 30 + New (and Nasty) Data Plans</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/iphone-3g-in-canada-rogers-extends-306gb-to-sept-30-new-and-nasty-data-plans/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/iphone-3g-in-canada-rogers-extends-306gb-to-sept-30-new-and-nasty-data-plans/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 12:08:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[
My fellow Canadians, if you&#8217;re already enjoying the virtually &#8220;unlimited&#8221; goodness and peace of mind that comes with Rogers reluctant, 11th hour $30/6GB promotional plan, then there&#8217;s nothing to see here. Your rate is good for the length of your contract.
If you haven&#8217;t jumped on the &#8220;deal&#8221; yet, however, remember that the plan is set [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
My fellow Canadians, if you&#8217;re already enjoying the virtually &#8220;unlimited&#8221; goodness and peace of mind that comes with Rogers reluctant, 11th hour $30/6GB promotional plan, then there&#8217;s nothing to see here. Your rate is good for the length of your contract.</p>
<p>If you haven&#8217;t jumped on the &#8220;deal&#8221; yet, however, remember that the plan is set [...]</p>
<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://www.theiphoneblog.com/2008/08/28/iphone-3g-in-canada-rogers-extends-30-6-gb-to-sept-new-nasty-data-plans/'> continued here </a></p>
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		<title>BBEdit 9.0 released</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/bbedit-90-released/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimate-apple.com/2008/08/28/bbedit-90-released/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 14:08:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>AppleFan</dc:creator>
		
		<guid isPermaLink="false"></guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Filed under: Software
BBEdit has released its eponymous BBEdit 9 text editor, a major update that includes a rewritten project manager, improvements to search and document comparison features, and a text-completion tool. 
Find and Multi-File search are now separate commands, both available from the Search menu. The dialog boxes are also now non-modal! Welcome to the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Filed under: <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/category/software/" rel="tag">Software</a></p>
<p><img vspace="5" hspace="5" border="0" align="right" alt="" src="http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.tuaw.com/media/2008/08/bbedit-23842834892.jpg" />BBEdit has released its eponymous <a href="http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/index.html">BBEdit 9 text editor</a>, a major update that includes a rewritten project manager, improvements to search and document comparison features, and a text-completion tool. </p>
<p>Find and Multi-File search are now separate commands, both available from the Search menu. The dialog boxes are also now non-modal! Welcome to the 20th century. Also gone is the mysterious &#8220;don&#8217;t find&#8221; button. </p>
<p>Text completion appears much like the system-wide <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2008/08/13/mac-101-pressing-f5-in-a-text-field/">F5 trick</a>: a pause will bring up a little pop-up menu of likely options. However, users can change the behavior to only show the menu with a click or keystroke. </p>
<p>Also included in the update is improved language support for JavaScript, Objective C, Obj-C++, Ruby, and YAML. The <a href="http://www.barebones.com/support/bbedit/arch_bbedit9.html">release notes</a> are enormous, and if you have any niggling irritations with prior versions of BBEdit, they may very well be solved. </p>
<p>BBEdit is $129 for new users, and $30 for owners of existing licenses. Anyone who purchased BBEdit 8.5 and above on or after January 1 gets a free upgrade.</p>
<p>[Via <a href="http://www.macworld.com/article/135267/2008/08/bbedit.html?lsrc=rss_main">Macworld</a>]</p>
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<p><b>More:</b> <a target='_blank' href='http://feeds.tuaw.com/~r/weblogsinc/tuaw/~3/377519037/'> continued here </a></p>
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